Innkeep
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jun 4, 2008
- Messages
- 1,273
- Reaction score
- 8
Your live website looks great! Makes me want to book a room immediately (I wish I could).I think the color combo now works better. The in-text links are differently colored so indicate there is something there to be aware of.Arks I knew a chap who had your gift and was actually sought after in the military as he could easily determine camouflage in a forest/jungle. Artificial greens stood out to him. Do you have this same ability?To clarify, for people with my special color vision gift, red and green don't disappear, they just both look the same, or nearly the same, so red text on a green background is hard to read, and green text on a red background is hard to read. The problem goes away, though, if there's a lot of value (contrast) difference. For example, dark red on light green isn't too bad. Neither is light red on dark green. It's just when they are about the same value (darkness) that they are hard to tell apart.Madeleine said:Red and green disappear for Arks and other guys with that color problem.
Years ago I wrote a letter to Time Magazine complaining because they were printing charts with red lines and green lines and I couldn't tell a thing about them. They didn't care enough to respond!.
.Not that I know of. But I'm convinced that blue is much more vivid to me than to the un-gifted.Joey Bloggs said:Artificial greens stood out to him. Do you have this same ability?
Regarding underlined links and old school, sometimes I think we're losing a lot of good function by giving form the upper hand, trying to be new and cutting edge at the expense of what functions well.
The theme my website uses has in-text links look exactly the same as regular text, and I hate that. I refuse to make readers wave their mouse over every word as they read it to see if there's more information available on a subject. That's just ridiculous.
To me, getting the information out is more important than following the lead lemmings over the cliff. Somehow, though, that's a mixed metaphor. <--in-text link
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On the recipe page, some of the ones that are listed aren't linked yet. I suspect that you're still working on recipes?